US law enforcement is quietly applying pressure on telecommunication companies to install technology that would provide them with user data, a strategy likely to expand government surveillance into areas where users do not know they are being monitored.

Hoping to expand the government’s ability to intercept pictures,
text, chat logs, and other data in real time, the Federal Bureau
of Investigation has sought to convince online companies to
install new, previously undisclosed software known as “port
reader,” according to a CNET report.

Port reader is known as a “harvesting program” so
all-encompassing that data carriers are “extra-cautious” about
its use, said one former government official, who spoke to the
technology website on the condition of anonymity.

The program, “an interception device by definition” that
could present major privacy risks, has yet to be used on an
industry-wide level and is reportedly only installed when an
already existing network does not have the technological
capability to direct users’ information into the hands of law
enforcement.

“In circumstances where a provider is unable to comply with a
court order utilizing its own technical solution(s), law
enforcement may offer to provide technical assistance to meet the
obligation of the court order,” read an FBI statement.

The carriers currently using the so-called port reader have not
been reported.

US Attorney General Eric Holder and the FBI have maintained that
the surveillance techniques, including the real-time monitoring
of online activity, is legal under a provision of the Patriot
Act, signed under President George W. Bush in the wake of the
September 11 terrorist attacks. The Department of Justice
contacted social media networks 80 per cent more between 2010 and
2011.

Now, according to the American Civil Liberties Union, police are
employing a 1986 law designed to tell them what phone number a
suspect dialed to collect information about an individual’s
social media activity.

The FBI is also known to be using techniques pioneered by hackers
in order to keep up with ever-changing advances in technology. To
monitor encrypted communication the Bureau “hires people who
have hacking skill, and they purchase tools that are capable of
doing these things,” a former official in the FBI’s cyber
division told the Wall Street Journal. “When you do, it’s because you don’t
have any other choice.”

These measures, including one so-called “web bug” that
records all the information in an individual’s computer, are said
to target specific cases, unlike the NSA data harvesting that
collects information on millions.

“People should understand that local cops are going to be
hacking into surveillance targets,” Christopher Soghoian, a
principal technologist at the ACLU, told the WSJ. “We should
have a debate about that.”